Join today and have your say! It’s FREE!

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Please Try Again
{{ error }}
By providing my email, I consent to receiving investment related electronic messages from Stockhouse.

or

Sign In

Please Try Again
{{ error }}
Password Hint : {{passwordHint}}
Forgot Password?

or

Please Try Again {{ error }}

Send my password

SUCCESS
An email was sent with password retrieval instructions. Please go to the link in the email message to retrieve your password.

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Quote  |  Bullboard  |  News  |  Opinion  |  Profile  |  Peers  |  Filings  |  Financials  |  Options  |  Price History  |  Ratios  |  Ownership  |  Insiders  |  Valuation

Fortune Minerals Limited. T.FT

Alternate Symbol(s):  FTMDF

Fortune Minerals Ltd is a Canadian mining and mine development company focused on developing the NICO Cobalt-Gold-Bismuth Copper Project in the Northwest Territories. The company plans to build a hydrometallurgical plant in southern Canada to process NICO metal concentrates. Fortune also owns the satellite Sue-Dianne Copper-Silver-Gold Deposit located 25 km north of the NICO Project, which is a potential future source of incremental mill feed to extend the life.


TSX:FT - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Post by member321on Mar 06, 2011 10:28pm
228 Views
Post# 18242043

Financing For Juniors Available

Financing For Juniors Available

New investors bring financing bonanza to junior miners

Osisko Mining Corp
OSK.TO
$14.26
-0.08-0.56%
03/04/2011
The Bank Of Nova Scotia
BNS.TO
$59.66
+0.12+0.20%
03/04/2011

TORONTO |Sun Mar 6, 2011 2:25pm EST


TORONTO(Reuters) - A whole new class of conservative investor is piling intothe mining sector -- once the exclusive domain of daring risk-takers --bringing a bonanza of funding options to junior miners racing towardproduction.

Pensionfund managers andsovereign wealth funds are now hungry to providefinancing for projectsdeemed worthy of delivering stable, long-termreturns.

"That'sa verystrong signal that this asset class is large enough now and thereturnsare steady enough, or expected to be steady enough," said MikeWhite, thepresident of IBK Capital Corp, a Toronto specialist in equityfinancingfor miners with projects under development.

"Younowhave more demand than this world has ever seen for metals," hesaid. "Sowhat do we see? We see the investment bankers of the world andotherinvestors and institutions reacting."

Whitecommentssome ahead of the PDAC prospectors and developers conventionrunningMarch 6-9 in Toronto. The show, sponsored in part by IBKCapital, willbring together hundreds of small-cap miners withfinanciers looking fornew projects.

Newfound interest in mining finance is clearly evident.

TheCanadaPension Plan Investment Board, Canada's No. 2 pensionfundadministrator, recently created a team dedicated to privateequityinvesting in mining.

LastNovember,the CPPIB, with some C$140 billion ($144 billion) undermanagement,completed a second tranche of a C$150 million credit facilitywithOsisko Mining Corp (OSK.TO).

Itisnot that investment criteria have changed for the CPPIB andinvestorslike it. What has receded is fears of short-term volatility inmetalprices. Investors that traditionally shunned mining in favorofinfrastructure and other conservative investments are taking afreshlook, more confident of consistent returns.

Thatassurancereflects a growing consensus that commodities are goingthrough what isknown as a "super cycle," driven by Asian economicgrowth. To many, asteady rise in prices seems all but assured for yearsto come.

"TheCPP InvestmentBoard is interested in pursuing more direct investmentopportunities inthe extractive industries, including mining," MarkWiseman, CPPIB'sexecutive vice-president, told Reuters in an emailedstatement.

"Asa long-terminvestor, CPPIB has a comparative advantage in its abilityto withstandthe volatility inherent in commodity-based industries."

APPETITE ON THE RISE

Thenewpools of available investment means junior miners with projectsclose toproduction have greater access to capital than at any time inrecentmemory, according to industry experts interviewed on the eve ofPDAC, theindustry's largest annual gathering.

"Asprices continue to rise higher and macrofactors enter into the picture,projects that may have been questionableand not developable at lowercommodity prices ... are certainly moreeconomic," said Lawrence Lewis,head of equity capital markets at ScotiaCapital, the investment bankingarm of Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS.TO). Scotia Capital is also a PDAC sponsor.

JeffRichmond,a managing director at Scotia Capital, said its minefinancing businesshas grown in parallel with the rise in metal prices."The market has beenopen," he told Reuters.

Thefloodhas gathered pace since the end of 2009, after many metalpricesrecovered from a brief swoon during the global economic crisis.Gold,the classic safe haven, barely faltered.

Aswellas the pension funds, sovereign wealth funds from China,Korea,Singapore or Dubai are also increasingly active in mining, wheretheycan exchange U.S. dollar-denominated savings for hard mining assets.

Morethanever before, Chinese, Indian and Brazilian companies arenegotiatingoff-take agreements -- financing pegged to a share of futureproduction.Their aim is to acquire more of the raw materials needed tofeedmanufacturing processes or infrastructure development in theirboomingeconomies.

Asian andLatinAmerican banks are another class of relative newcomer to mining, anareaonce dominated by their North American and European counterparts.

"Wearewitnessing a shift of the balance of power to emerging marketcountries,particularly Brazil, India, and China," said Darryl Levitt, alawyerspecializing in mergers at Macleod Dixon in Toronto.

"Miningcompaniesand financing parties located there are now scouring the restof theworld for financing opportunities to secure resources," he said."It isno longer a question of developing their own backyards butextendingtheir reach into other countries which are minerally endowed."

($1=
.97 Canadian)

(Additional reporting by Euan Rocha and Julie Gordon)

Bullboard Posts